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Moon landing is still one of top of the views


Almost four decades after Neil Armstrong’s words “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” crackled into living-rooms, the first moon landing remains the most iconic TV moment for one in five Yorkshire viewers.

On July 21, 1969, viewers watched in awe as Armstrong stepped on to the surface of the Moon.

The live broadcast, to a global audience of 600 million, illustrated the power of television.

Forty years later, in an online survey commissioned by TV Licensing, 20 per cent of people from the region picked the historic event as the most iconic moment broadcast live on TV.

It came second after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US in 2001, picked by 32 per cent of people polled.

Iain Logie Baird, curator of television at the National Media Museum in Bradford, and grandson of John Logie Baird, inventor of the first television, said: “A large part of television’s power lies in how it is able to transmit vision and sound instantaneously.

“Moments like the Moon landing are ephemeral – they can be experienced only once in real time. This unpredictability unleashes a sense of mass anticipation. Everyone is watching the same historic events unfold.

“Watching TV images from the Moon was a completely new experience for viewers and still exerts a powerful hold over our collective imagination.”

TV Licensing commissioned the research as part of a campaign to raise awareness of the need to be covered by a TV licence when watching live television, whether on a TV set, computer or mobile phone.

TV Licensing spokesman Charlotte Renwick said: “A lot has changed since Neil Arm-strong set foot on the Moon, not least how we watch TV.

“Many people will have gathered round a computer, rather than a TV set, to watch the most recent event in our top ten, Barack Obama’s inauguration.”

The first Moon landing, and other iconic TV moments in the survey, are shown on a loop at the National Media Museum’s Experience TV gallery.

The gallery opened in 2007, when the museum held a Media Matters campaign urging visitors to vote for iconic media moments in television, film, photography, radio and the internet.

Clips shown at the museum include the Morecambe and Wise breakfast sketch, the final of the first series of Big Brother, and the 1953 Coronation.

Comments(9)

Fastnecker says...
9:41am Fri 10 Jul 09

European Cup Final 1975. Leeds in Paris.

FPM says...
12:32pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Hi,

I just found this video
(http://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=DdaBwh..
.) about the tecnology NASA used on the moon landing. And I thought that would be interesting. It’s a new tv show for celebrating the 40th anniversary of moon landing.

for you.

Hope you enjoy!

Best regards,

FPM

Juice Terry says...
12:40pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Jade Goodey's kebabs.

Fastnecker says...
12:56pm Fri 10 Jul 09

"Hi are you Matt Bianco" on Swap Shop

Juice Terry says...
12:57pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Oliver Reed falling over the sofa and snogging that lezzer.

Fastnecker says...
1:01pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Norman Tebbit trying to cover his nads while getting stretchered out of the Grand Hotel, Brighton

Iona Cortina says...
7:28pm Fri 10 Jul 09

On a side note, it's a pity we're not allowed to comment on certain stories in the T&A.

One such story is the one where local BNP chavs in Buttershaw, starved a dog to death.

Why aren't these animals in prison for what they did ?

albion says...
9:28pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Iona Cortina wrote:
On a side note, it's a pity we're not allowed to comment on certain stories in the T&A.

One such story is the one where local BNP chavs in Buttershaw, starved a dog to death.

Why aren't these animals in prison for what they did ?
I agree they got off with very lenient penalties.
How do you know that they are attached to that particular political party, or are you just trying to provoke more off topic backlash and ultimately censorship? As indeed we have come to expect from you.
Iconic moments on TV must include the 1966 world cup final.

Dr Evil says...
1:57am Sat 11 Jul 09

Steve Redgrave's Golds (all of them heart-stopping).


Neil Armstrong on the moon England win the World Cup in 1966 The wedding of Charles and Diana Barak Obama's acceptance speech

Neil Armstrong on the moon

England win the World Cup in 1966

The wedding of Charles and Diana

Barak Obama's acceptance speech



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